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Also published as: Oliver A Garden
articles
Yongjie Lai, Qoua L Her, Yue Zhang +8 more · 2026 · Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Given the complexity of dementia, the inconsistent evidence on statins and dementia highlights the need for robust methods to assess heterogeneous treatment effects (HTEs). We emulated a target trial Show more
Given the complexity of dementia, the inconsistent evidence on statins and dementia highlights the need for robust methods to assess heterogeneous treatment effects (HTEs). We emulated a target trial using UK Biobank comparing statin initiators and non-initiators aged ≥55 years. Marginal structural models were fitted to estimate 5-year adjusted risk difference (aRD). We used iterative causal forest, a causal machine learning subgrouping algorithm, to identify subgroups with HTEs. Among 18,366 participants, the overall aRD for all-cause dementia was -1.0‰ (95% CI: -4.2‰ to 2.3‰). We identified subgroups by polygenic risk score for Alzheimer's disease (AD) excluding apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype ("non-APOE PRS"). Participants with high non-APOE PRS showed cognitive benefit (all-cause dementia: aRD -5.9‰, 95% CI: -8.1‰ to 1.2‰; AD: aRD -5.0‰, 95% CI: -8.2‰ to -0.2‰). Participants with high non-APOE PRS may benefit from statins, suggesting genetic susceptibility beyond APOE could modify statins' cognitive effects. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/alz.71178
APOE
Christina J F Courreges, Elizabeth C M Davenport, Benoit Bilanges +10 more · 2024 · Frontiers in immunology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Regulatory T (Treg) cells are essential for the maintenance of immunological tolerance, yet the molecular components required for their maintenance and effector functions remain incompletely defined. Show more
Regulatory T (Treg) cells are essential for the maintenance of immunological tolerance, yet the molecular components required for their maintenance and effector functions remain incompletely defined. Inactivation of VPS34 in Treg cells led to an early, lethal phenotype, with massive effector T cell activation and inflammation, like mice lacking Treg cells completely. However, VPS34-deficient Treg cells developed normally, populated the peripheral lymphoid organs and effectively supressed conventional T cells Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1374621
PIK3C3